Here's a challenge for you. I have acquired 3 rotary switches, each with 3 wafers and 16 switch positions. I want to build a volume control for my Gainclone. I would like the quality to be as good as possible, ie, signal passing through as few resistors and soldered joints as possible at any one time. I would also like it to have a sensitivity of 1dB over a range of 60dB or so as my amp needs to cope with varying sources. I'm not concerned about how many resistors I will need to purchase or how fiddly it would be to construct.

Does anybody have any idea how I might do this? I was thinking of using one switch for a central volume control and using the other two each as a trim for the L & R channels in a similar way to the kit you can buy from tubecad.com
( see http://www.tubecad.com/Three-Switch_...nuator_PCB.pdf )

How do you propose to get 60- 1 dB steps from a switch with 18 positions?

If you need such fine control AND some L/R balance capability, use an attenuator chip controlled by a uC. Accurate channel matching, small steps and lots of them, remote control capability... What more could you want?

Hi Tl5,
that glassware two stage attenuator looks pretty good in the hand.

Something they forgot to mention.
The second stage attenuator should use an impedance about power amp Zin/10.
The preceeding attenuator stage should be second stage Z/10.
The source should therefore be about Power amp Zin/1000.

The closer you push these matching impedances the more inaccurate the 36 steps becomes in the two stage attenuator.

Even so, it's a clever way to reduce the number of resistors and solder joints on the way thro' and still incorporate a fine balance control

The Bottlehead folks make a more modest step attenuator, 7 or 8 position. They offer them as suppliments or replacements for their ForePlay tube pre-amp kit ( http://www.bottlehead.com/et/parts/parts.htm ... 2/3rds down the page ).

" ... For use in active circuits the basic 15K series design is re-implemented as a shunt attenuator, often regarded as the most transparent sounding attenuator configuration, putting only one "padding" resistor in the signal path. This additional padding resistor may be chosen from among four values included with the kit, to give the nominal 19dB gain of the original Foreplay preamp circuit (with Anticipation upgrade) a more flexible range of gain. You can choose from 9 db (close to being an industry standard), 3dB, -3dB or -12dB maximum overall gain with the change of one resistor. ..." ... & low cost @ US$40 (for 2)+ shipping ... and they really are quiet.